The home vacancy rate is the proportion of the homeowner inventory vacant and for sale at the time of the survey.
The Bureau compiles data from a sampling of approximately 72,000 occupied and vacant housing units across the country and District of Columbia. The bureau also collects information on homeownership vacancies and certain characteristics about housing units, such as the age of household members, family status, race/ethnicity and median family income.
The overall home vacancy rate in the U.S. was one percent in 2020, a 28.6 percent decrease from 2019.
Home Vacancy Rates by State in 2020
Rank | State | Home vacancies |
---|---|---|
1 | Alaska | 1.9% |
1 | Louisiana | 1.9% |
3 | Florida | 1.5% |
4 | Arkansas | 1.4% |
4 | District of Columbia | 1.4% |
6 | Hawaii | 1.3% |
6 | Illinois | 1.3% |
6 | Mississippi | 1.3% |
6 | Montana | 1.3% |
6 | New Mexico | 1.3% |
6 | New York | 1.3% |
6 | North Dakota | 1.3% |
6 | Wyoming | 1.3% |
14 | Kansas | 1.2% |
14 | Kentucky | 1.2% |
14 | Maine | 1.2% |
17 | Alabama | 1.1% |
17 | Michigan | 1.1% |
17 | Nevada | 1.1% |
17 | New Jersey | 1.1% |
17 | Oklahoma | 1.1% |
17 | Rhode Island | 1.1% |
17 | South Dakota | 1.1% |
17 | Texas | 1.1% |
17 | West Virginia | 1.1% |
26 | Georgia | 1% |
26 | Pennsylvania | 1% |
28 | Delaware | 0.9% |
28 | Maryland | 0.9% |
28 | Missouri | 0.9% |
28 | North Carolina | 0.9% |
28 | Oregon | 0.9% |
28 | Tennessee | 0.9% |
34 | Arizona | 0.8% |
34 | Idaho | 0.8% |
34 | Indiana | 0.8% |
34 | South Carolina | 0.8% |
34 | Washington | 0.8% |
39 | California | 0.7% |
39 | Iowa | 0.7% |
39 | Nebraska | 0.7% |
39 | Ohio | 0.7% |
39 | Vermont | 0.7% |
44 | Colorado | 0.6% |
44 | Connecticut | 0.6% |
44 | Minnesota | 0.6% |
44 | Virginia | 0.6% |
48 | Massachusetts | 0.5% |
48 | New Hampshire | 0.5% |
48 | Wisconsin | 0.5% |
51 | Utah | 0.4% |